We all have that one drawer, box, or external drive full of digital junk from 2008. You know the one: blurry photos from a flip phone, a half-finished novel, and a folder labeled “Taxes_2009” that is definitely not taxes.
That night, I woke up at 3:00 AM to a notification sound. My PC was off. But my smart speaker whispered: “Smiling is mandatory.”
A smile stretched across my in-game face. I was not smiling in real life. I force-quit with Task Manager. The process name? Joy.exe . I deleted the folder. Emptied the Recycle Bin. Reformatted the drive.
I clicked on a closet. The door opened. Inside wasn't a coat hanger. It was a mirror. My webcam light turned on. File- Joyville.zip
The Audio_Logs folder contained 17 .wav files. The first 16 were labeled Log_001 through Log_016 . The 17th was a corrupted file named DONT_OPEN_ME.raw .
I checked my downloads folder this morning. There it is again: . No source. No sender. Just the file. And a new timestamp: today.
No readme file. No context. Just a 1.4GB zip archive with a timestamp from seven years ago—the same year my uncle “went on a long vacation” and never came back. We all have that one drawer, box, or
Plugging it in, I expected nostalgia. Instead, I found a single compressed folder: .
The sun is always watching. And it wants you to be happy . Have you ever found a cursed file on an old drive? Tell me your story in the comments—if you’re still allowed to frown.
I did not turn on my webcam.
It didn’t install. It just… opened.
So if you ever find a file called Joyville.zip —on a forum, an old drive, or an email from a relative you haven't spoken to in years—do yourself a favor.